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What You Find While Cleaning Out the Office of a World-Class Researcher

94 pointsby scottcowleyalmost 10 years ago

17 comments

bsderalmost 10 years ago
I have a different take about the books.<p>Worthwhile technical books have not been published since about 2000.<p>Technical publishing died in the dot-bomb. The number of new technical books I bought prior to about 2005 was staggering. The number of new technical books I bought in the past 5 years borders on zero.<p>First, the web killed a bunch of technology publishing. Buying &quot;new&quot; technical books rarely makes sense as the target is probably moving too quickly and the web will be more accurate. So, the only &quot;new&quot;, worthwhile technical books are covering more timeless fundamentals, and we probably already have good books for those.<p>Second, the attitudes of modern youngsters are a bit of an issue. &quot;If it isn&#x27;t on the web, it doesn&#x27;t exist.&quot; Well, there was a whole lot of history prior to 2000, but none of you know how to find it. That&#x27;s why you all keep making the same mistakes.<p>Third, technical books got ferociously expensive. Most technical books that are covering something semi-cutting edge are almost $200.<p>Fourth, there are no outlets for technical books to be browsed. Amazon killed all the technical bookstores because it wasn&#x27;t paying sales tax. If I can&#x27;t browse a book, I&#x27;m certainly not paying $200 for it.<p>So, while this might be an office of someone who checked out 15 years ago, the lack of books later than 2000 isn&#x27;t good evidence.
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mc32almost 10 years ago
I think it&#x27;s better to review a life or career as a whole rather than parse it and assign some sentimentality to the different aspects. In other words, so he or she may have &#x27;mentally retired&#x27; but don&#x27;t count that against anyone. It&#x27;s not like were supposed to live full bore till you keel over. Maybe they called it in. Never the less they did accomplish something -more than many. That&#x27;s not something to feel sorry about.<p>These are, after all, just people. People the same as the homeless or the newborn. Queer as folk, as they say. We&#x27;re just folk. A bit strange but folk none the less.
astrocytealmost 10 years ago
It would appear that people take away what they want from an experience.. Defined as the subjective experience.<p>There are many other views ..<p>&gt; I may take over this guy&#x27;s office and leave behind the same stuff he did, albeit newer versions, and never accomplish a fourth of what he did<p>&gt; Even though he was passionate about what he did, he still had important things outside of it like a beautiful family<p>&gt; People go through things in life. Yet, they carry on.<p>&gt; Form and function... Function being the same, what is really changing?<p>&gt; I will never truly know a person&#x27;s story until I take the time to hear it from them.. Otherwise, I&#x27;m likely making up my own story that confirms with my own beliefs.<p>The author of the article has fears most of all and he molded what was left in the office to conform to those fears.<p>Whose to say what mental toll great accomplishments take... If it takes you 50 years to create what one man did in 5, who are you to comment on &#x27;coming&#x27; to work for the remaining 45? All things being considered, in the aforementioned example, at least his work had 45 years to be shared and built upon. What of a person who takes 50?
breischlalmost 10 years ago
What people leave behind is the things that don&#x27;t matter anymore. I&#x27;ve walked out of offices with all my recent&#x2F;relevant possessions, leaving behind nothing but books about fancy new technology like DHTML and ASP.NET v1.1. Most likely the professor took all the more recent stuff with him, and left behind all the decades-outdated research and technology because he didn&#x27;t want the hassle of moving all of it just so he could dispose of it.<p>That said, maybe he was phoning it in for years. That would be sad, because it&#x27;s a waste of time and life.
lifeisstillgoodalmost 10 years ago
Don&#x27;t be terrified. I suspect that once your professor had nothin left to prove, other things started to become more important - ground breaking happens when you walk where no one else has, even if that&#x27;s not leading anywhere but home.<p>Perhaps the best research we can do is about us and our loved ones.
wmatalmost 10 years ago
I love this. It describes a reality that I think exists into the present day. Regardless of our passions, real life is always there, filling ashtrays and picture frames whether you want it to or not.
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oxryly1almost 10 years ago
This is interesting, but seems to end on an unfair note. Perhaps our good professor&#x27;s interests and activities slowly moved in a different direction that didn&#x27;t leave the same recognizable paper and object trail...
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ternaryoperatoralmost 10 years ago
The conclusions of this article seem wrong. What the author is seeing are the books the ex-academic <i>left behind</i>. Surely, he took the good ones with him. In fact, he likely took all the things he wanted to keep and left this stuff, which the author deems significant, because he didn&#x27;t want it.
slowernetalmost 10 years ago
The office holder had a long, accomplished career, but the author, bummed that he can&#x27;t find any up to date books to steal from the office, is calling him out for phoning it in because he accumulated some junk over the years and went through a tough time when he lost a child.<p>Pardon me if I&#x27;m not dying to hear the insights this experience triggered for you.
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fragsworthalmost 10 years ago
This is incredibly depressing. I hope I stay active and relevant, well into my old age.
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Jugurthaalmost 10 years ago
Everything in the post almost <i>exactly</i> matches. The only things that don&#x27;t match are the fridge and the ashtray.<p>I was like a scavenger roaming in the dark faculties. The best were Physics and Electrical Engineering faculties, and the labs of few of our Maths Profs (I had the ones who wrote our textbooks for Electricity and I&#x27;d press them to give me some stuff they had (usually unpublished for personal use). I had few gems along the way.<p>I&#x27;ve found a lot of stuff and was often burried in the pile they just put next to the appropriate lab&#x27;s door. It gave a glimpse on where the labs were coming, what was their focus at a given period, what were they working on, thesis titles, how students prepared them, what did they use to produce it, which languages, etc. These things aren&#x27;t online or in a database.<p>I still have most of my stuff from college. There&#x27;s a bunch of things that are cool(the course in 4th year on Control Theory for example: information that _quickly_ gets you to speed on RST digital controllers, Pontryagin, Bellman is pretty scarce). I wasn&#x27;t in good terms with the Prof, but boy she had a great course.<p>So I appreciate what I find looking in those dusty places.
crimsonalucardalmost 10 years ago
The inevitable reality of life. Most of us will end up this way.<p>Rather then trying to change the universe, I say it&#x27;s better to enjoy the experience.
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yodsanklaialmost 10 years ago
This happened to me too after a &quot;world-class researcher&quot; from my lab retired. We received an email from the lab director telling us that everybody was invited to go pick up books in his former office. Everything left behind would be thrown away.<p>As expected, there were nothing of interest there. Old books and articles (I assume the best stuff was taken by other people already!). Not much to talk about really. Not different from any other researcher&#x27;s office.<p>Actually, maybe this was the only really thing noticeable. Despite being extremely famous, his office was similar to anyone else&#x27;s office.<p>Unlike the person mentioned in the article, he was very active and passionate research-wise until his retirement. That being said, not being active research wise doesn&#x27;t mean being idle! there are lot of useful and interesting things to do for an academic that don&#x27;t involve research.
irremediablealmost 10 years ago
Poignant, but IMO not insightful. You could interpret this any way you please.<p>I&#x27;m especially pissed off by the way he mentions the anti-depressant medication bottle as a sign of failure. Maybe the professor would have been far more depressed if he hadn&#x27;t been working on awesome new ideas. Maybe he would have been depressed either way. How is the empty bottle a sign of failure? He sought treatment for his mental health problems. If you scorn that, you&#x27;re a coward, and I attach very little weight to your opinions on how to live.
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et2oalmost 10 years ago
&quot;[...] And you find an empty bottle of anti-depressants.<p>And you realize this is what happens when you keep coming to work years after you’ve mentally retired. This terrifies me.&quot;<p>I may perhaps be overly sensitive to this, but this juxtaposition makes me a little uncomfortable.
digikataalmost 10 years ago
Hmm, sometime in the last decade, I started shifting any remaining &#x27;book&#x27; consumption for technical literature purchases to ebooks. They take up less space and are portable between home&#x2F;office, are searchable... etc.
shardalmost 10 years ago
Maybe he moved his life online? I have slowly stopped buying books, CDs, DVDs, photo prints after the early 2000s. I don&#x27;t think it&#x27;s that uncommon...